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On the structure of the self-sustaining cycle in separating and reattaching flows
- Source :
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 857:907-936
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018.
-
Abstract
- The separating and reattaching flows and the wake of a finite rectangular plate are studied by means of direct numerical simulation data. The large amount of information provided by the numerical approach is exploited here to address the multi-scale features of the flow and to assess the self-sustaining mechanisms that form the basis of the main unsteadinesses of the flows. We first analyse the statistically dominant flow structures by means of three-dimensional spatial correlation functions. The developed flow is found to be statistically dominated by quasi-streamwise vortices and streamwise velocity streaks as a result of flow motions induced by hairpin-like structures. On the other hand, the reverse flow within the separated region is found to be characterized by spanwise vortices. We then study the spectral properties of the flow. Given the strongly inhomogeneous nature of the flow, the spectral analysis has been conducted along two selected streamtraces of the mean velocity field. This approach allows us to study the spectral evolution of the flow along its paths. Two well-separated characteristic scales are identified in the near-wall reverse flow and in the leading-edge shear layer. The first is recognized to represent trains of small-scale structures triggering the leading-edge shear layer, whereas the second is found to be related to a very large-scale phenomenon that embraces the entire flow field. A picture of the self-sustaining mechanisms of the flow is then derived. It is shown that very-large-scale fluctuations of the pressure field alternate between promoting and suppressing the reverse flow within the separation region. Driven by these large-scale dynamics, packages of small-scale motions trigger the leading-edge shear layers, which in turn created them, alternating in the top and bottom sides of the rectangular plate with a relatively long period of inversion, thus closing the self-sustaining cycle.
- Subjects :
- Spatial correlation
Mechanical Engineering
wakes/jets
Direct numerical simulation
Mechanics
turbulent flows
Wake
Condensed Matter Physics
separated flows
Mechanics of Materials
01 natural sciences
Pressure field
Strength of materials
010305 fluids & plasmas
Vortex
Physics::Fluid Dynamics
Shear (geology)
0103 physical sciences
Vector field
010306 general physics
Geology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14697645 and 00221120
- Volume :
- 857
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1dfc31b2f2b746b74690fee7a7d4d0b9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2018.772